Your local Planned Parenthood health center can provide you with a prescription for the NuvaRing and
other contraceptive information.
Not exact matches
The «gender equality» UN norm is inclusive of and inseparable from the
other UN norm of «reproductive health and rights», which is itself inclusive, inter alia, of «safe abortion» and of universal access to
contraceptive information and services by 2015.
The Pill, Condoms and You has a detailed explanation about two of the most popular forms of birth control while Natural Birth Control will provide you with valuable
information about
other contraceptive methods.
The demand for reproductive
information and
contraceptives still exceeds the supply in dozens of developing countries, according to the report and separate assessments by
other population groups — meaning that tens of millions of women are probably having larger families than they want.
Planned Parenthood can provide you with more
information about birth control pills and
other contraceptive choices.
If you'd like more
information about
contraceptives and their uses, contact Planned Parenthood, where a clinician can provide you with more
information about birth control pills and
other contraceptive choices.
The curricula were considered weak in a number of areas: They emphasized abstinence; lacked adequate basic
information on
contraceptives, condoms, sex and sexual health; excluded key topics such as reproduction, STIs, abortion, access to condoms and sexual health services; and omitted
other social and contextual aspects, such as harassment and parental monitoring.
Birth control (Pills, The Patch, The Shot, or
other long - term, multi-year
contraceptives) Get more
information
While not all patients are interested in receiving
contraceptives at the time of an abortion, many are: In a 2010 Guttmacher Institute survey of abortion clinic patients, two - thirds expressed a desire to leave their appointment with a
contraceptive method and slightly more than half indicated a preference for receiving
contraceptive information and services during their abortion care rather than in
other health care settings.1
As Congress continues to debate these issues, the Guttmacher Institute received a request from Sen. Patty Murray (D - WA), in her capacity as ranking member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, for
information about FQHCs» ability to serve the millions of women who currently obtain
contraceptive care from Planned Parenthood and
other types of Title X — supported sites.
In order to respond, we have expanded upon the analysis that we conducted in response to your April 7, 2017 request for
information concerning the availability of publicly funded
contraceptive care to U.S. women, particularly from sites operated by Planned Parenthood and federally qualified health centers (FQHCs).1 In this analysis, we assume that all the clients seeking
contraceptive care who are currently served by Planned Parenthood health centers in each state would be distributed to
other types of safety - net family planning centers in the same proportions that
contraceptive clients are currently served by each of these
other types of centers.